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The Lexington Dispatch. Wednesday, September 11.1907. ICineral Spring- Happenings. 0 To the Editor of The Dispatch: Corn crops in this section are fine. Cotton is opening very rapidly on ac? count of the hot days. Peas and potatoes are doing fairly well. We regret to learn that Miss Barba ?? cvinii ?a "her bed with typhoid fever and hope for her $ speedy recovery. Mr. Andrew Math'ias spent last yreek at the Jamestown exposition ?> and reports a fine time. A number of young people of this section spent Sunday at Tybee. Mr. Charlie Cromer, who has been spending his summer vacation at home, has returned to Lenoir College, Hickory, N. C. Mr. M. K. Kaminer is all smiles? M:}:.: it's another girl. Messrs. Johnnie Sox, Lester Miller and Arthur Roof, attended Children's I Day at St. Matthew's church last Saturday. Orange buds will soon open wide in this section. Young men, remember the Sabbath day and keepSit holy more in the i wa in t.hft "naftt at lUllUC uuau J v *" " x the Mineral SprinMon Sunday afternoons. % raSNTRY BOY. Sept. 6. ?' -j nf v Oak Orovs Iteias. . x Hi- 'i t } eg: / To the Editor of The Dispatch: Cotton picking is now the order of f , the day. A large qrowd of our young people attended the picnic at Mr. Franklin iteisler's last Saturday and reports a fine time. ' Rev. Wessinger and wife spent Sat ' urday night with the family of Mr. G. W. Price, on Route 2. t p.C \ * Mr. Thomas Crout and sister, Miss Leona. visited their uncle, Mr. P. H. Crap?, Sunday last. / A large crowd attended services at St. Paul's church Sunday. < Mr. and Mrs. Hampton Hendrix, of : / t ' Leesville, visited the family of Mr. W. T. Crape last Sunday. |fe:; Mr. E. Oout and sister, Miss Effie, #- visited Misses Yero and Winnie Craps Saturday and Sunday. p; ' \ Sep. 7. / BLUE EYE. $100 Reward, $100. TVi? TpnriArs rjf:thiR naner will be nleas td to learn that there is at least one dftaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. ; Hall's Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cnre is taken internally, acting directly nnpn the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the fonndation' of - * the patient's strength by bnildingnp the constitntion and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so mnch faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cnre. Send for list of testimonials. Address P. J. Cheney &Co., Toledo, O. , Sold by all Drnggists, 76c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa. tion. Bats Bat Bead Man's Boss. Greenville, Sept. 4.?While making an excavation yesterday for the McGee Manufacturing' Company v near this city Pink Reeder, a negro, was #?onorht hv cavincr earth and emofch v.?? o ered to death. The negro's body was removed during the night and placed in a vacant house to be prepared for burial.. "When an undertaker examined it this morning he found that , rats had attacked the corpse and eaten off the nose. The undertaker went to work and made a nose of plaster ofjparis, which he fitted in its proper place and painted black. The dead negro's relatives will never know of the mutilation done by the rats. I r Selp Wanted. \ She bought a device to mix the bread, And one to stir the cake; A tireless stove and a coffee-machine And one to broil the steak. And into her kitchen, so up-to-date, It's a pleasure, indeed, to look; But the family's boarding while she seeks A machinist who can cook. ?September Lippincott's. Had Tetter for Thirty Tears. I have suffered with tetter for thirty years and have tried almost countless remedies with little, if any, relief. Three boxes of Chamberlain's Salve cured me. It was a torture. It breaks out a little sometimes, but nothing to what it used to do.?D. H. Beach, Midland City, Ala. Chamberlain's Salve is for sale by ftammann ltu^ vu. / t m , Must Send the ICoaey. All persons sending barbecue and other advertisements for insertion in these colums must remit with the copy sent to the office one-half cent for each and every word. Otherwise the V copy will be held over until paid for. An average of 3,000 persons land each day in New York city from oceangoing vessels. / i '' i ? I motherhood; The first requisite of a good ft mother is good health, and the ex- ^ perience of maternity should not be approached without careful physical preparation, as a woman who is in good physical condition transmits to j her children the blessings of a good constitution. Preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkhanfs Vegetable Compound, which is made from native roots and / herbs, more successfully than by any J/ other medicine because it gives tone |c and strength to the entire feminine d organism, curing displacements, ulceration and inflammation, and the result is less suffering and more chile than thirty years \ * < re r\? < < i ir Lyaia c. pinKnamsve has been the standby of American mol NotewhatMrs.JainesChester,of427 ^ letter:?Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-"! wish e\ Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compou: of its gTeat value at this trying1 period it and I did so, and I cannot say enoug I recovered quickly and am in the best Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Coi remedy for the peculiar weaknesses ai It has cured almost every form of Fei tions, Weak Back, Falling and Displa * tions and Organic Diseases of Women a Childbirth and during the Change of L Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Women suffering from any form of write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass.' Vhhhbhhhhhi Transfers of Seal Estate. E The following transfers of real estate have been recorded in the clerk's , oflfce since our last issue: tl] ftemuel B. George, special referee, ca to L. M Mitchell, lot in Batesburg /for $1,100. ^ Marina E. Rich to Butler B. Hare, lot in Leesville for $400. w B. A. Gregory to Wade L. Gregory, ei % interest in two lots.Nathan Taylor to M. W. Lorick, 22% acres in Fork township for $285. Maggie Taylor to M. W. Lorick, 20 ai acre9 inFork township for $100. in Mrs. Leila Hartley to Julian and Lester Hartley, three lot9 in Batesburg for $1,000. , ai Job F. Wingard to Ernest E. Wing- ai ard, 130 acres in Fork township for ei fVAA f X,VW. Xv" Mary E. Hooker and other to Wiley Q. Jackson, 297 acres in Bull Swamp w township for $1,632. ? tt Elizabeth E Culler to John J. and ei G. L. Culler, 69}? acres in Sandy Run ' township for $350. 8 H. J. Eargle to J. T. Kirby, 228 w acres in Broad River township for st $2,736. ei Gilbert M. Berry to Walt. L. Lown, lot in New Brookland for $350. A. E. Warner to Lawrence W. e* Amick, 5 5-100 acres in Hollow Creek fc townshm for $75. n( T. I. Warner to Mrs. A. E. Warner, same as above. V1 C. R. Rish to Willie A. Rish, 100 tt acres in Black Creek township for $5. w J. J. Barrs to Elijah Hall, 100 acres in Bull Swamp township for $400. ? J. E. Mathias, Sr., to J. Albert *e Cromer, 5 16-100 acres in Lexington fr , township for $100. . 01 Geo. B. Wilson to Henry D. Boozer, 3 24-100 acres at Irene for $750. It. Lee Kleckley to D. Lawrence v< Corley, 9 acres in Lexington township p< for $50. T R. Glover Able to I. S. and Ida Hall, lot in town of Steadman for $500 J. E. Koon to C. P. Robinson and si J. A. Black welder, Idt iif. Chapiii for tc $1,400. Thos. J. Leaphart to T. Haskell Shull, 162% acres in Hollow Creek tc township for $4,000. Lost aad Found. T.nfit; hfttrwfiftn 9:80 n. m.. vesterdav n, and noon today, a bilious attack, with o nausea and sick headache. This loss ^ was occasioned by finding at Kauf- m msfrm Drug Co., and Derrick's Drug i. Store a box of Dr. King's New Life 0f Pills. Guaranteed for biliousness, si] malaria and jaundice. 25c. ac N Subscribe to Home and Farm. gt We are pleased to advise our readers m that we have made arrangements with the publishers of Home & Farm, whereby we can give this valuable g farm journal?the best of the kind in the south?for the small sum of 25c a year. Home & Farm is published twice a month and besides containing everything that interests the ^ " farmer, it has lot of reading matter for every member of the family, especially the housewife. The Dispatch and Home & Farm one year for $1.25; ^ Home & Farm alone 25c. Subscribe {5 now. _ of Sha Was Forced to Bide in a "Jim Crow" Car. Suffolk, Va., Sept. 5.?A case said 8t to be without precedent in any court 2C has been instituted here, when Mrs. ja Rosa Stone, white, entered suit for $10,000 damages against the Norfolk of and Western for being compelled to tl ride i& a "jim crow" car among the b< negroes. Mrs. Stone, being badly h; tanned, was taken for a negress. > ^ i % Chamberlain's Cough Eemedy One of the Best on the m Market. For many years Chamberlain's Cough gj Remedy has constantly gained in favor ^ and popularity until it is now one of the most staple medicines in use and has an enormous sale. It is intended especially for acute throat and lung ^ diseases A such as coughs, colds and &' croup, Mid can always be depended ej upon. It is pleasant and safe to take t and is undoubtedly the best in the . market for the purposes for which it is 1 intended. Sold by Kaufmann Drug Co. li ? i > ft It is thought that the North Caro- P lina railroad cases will be argued in the United States supreme court in October. Nearly all the phases of the rate question in the different states are involved in these cases. s< awMM???a?? MK5* JAM ELS CHESTER g # rS Iren healthy at birth. For more B t H getable Compound | thers in preparing" for childbirth. I N. 35th St., New York says in this I ery expectant mother knew about I ad. A neighbor who had learned I of a woman's life nrged me to try H h in regard to the good it did me. E of health now." 8 npound is certainly a successful n id ailments of women. 8 male Complaints, Dragging Sensa Lcements, Inflammation, Ulcera- E ind is invaluable in preparing for B : Invitation to Women I female weakness are invited to H Her advice is free. 8 looping Sweet Potatoes Sound Keeping sweet potatoes is one c tose things that require exactness i Lrrying out details. The loss c <reet- potatoes results from thre lings?digging when the ground : et and waiting too long to dig; cot ing too quickly and r.ot allowin te potatoes to undergo the sweatin ocess and becoming thoroughly dr; id, insufficient covering and allov ' ? 1 11. t i x. 1 g tne nms or uanKS to oecome wt om winter rains. We would buil 1 open shed, covering it rain-proo id protecting it on north and eas n sides, so as to prevent water frci lowing under when we have the win ith the rain. Then we would ban le potatoes in straw, corn stalks an irth. We would dig a layer of pin raw and put potatoes in hill as w anted them. Cover with stalks an raw, and leave until the cold weatl comes and they had sweated out. We would not cover well up wit irth until December 15th. So muc ?r banking; now as to digging. E it wait after the first frost bites tfc ines?dig before a rain comes whi] te earth is dry. We do not kno hy it is, but we have never ha ood luck with potatoes that wei ft out in the field undug, after tfc ost had killed the vines and a rai : two had thoroughly wet the land. Watch your hi?s, dryness and goo entilation are essentials to keepin itatoes, and with these you will ha\ it little trouble. The majority < .rmers think any old plank or boarc ifficient to make a covering for pot< ioQ> hnf. vrtn irro nf. trnnr ahflf 'VW ' MV4V J Vl* ?? "?"?* w J W**A WMV*W* ** '*'* itely rain-proof.?Southern Cultiv: >r. 1 We Guarantee Satisfaction. J. A. Brogdon, of the National Sig 3., Dayton, O., writes under date < 3t. 12, 1906: "Nosena is the only pre] ation I have ever used tliat relieve y affection so speedily and pleasantly am getting the first real pleasure oi ! breaching that I liave experience ace I contracted catarrh six yea] :o. Money would not buy my tube ( osena if I could not get another. Buy Nosena from Derrick's Dru ;ore and C. E. Corley and get yor oney back if not satisfied. Samp] be and booklet by mail 10 cents. Brown Manufacturing Co., It. Louis, Mo. and Greenville, Tenn. Where to Have It Dose. Bring or send your job work to Th ispatch office, such as note headi tter heads, bill heads statement! lvelopes, etc. In fact when yo ant printing of any kind, except th >or kind, come to The Dispatc fice. Prices the lowest. Fifteen Die in Hotel Fire. Tacoma, Wash., Sept. 5.?Fire d< royed the Webb Hotel at Sheltoi i miles from Tacoma, last night, reported 15 persons perished. Miss Bailey and Mrs. Mudge, bot : Shelton, are known to be amor le lost. All the other victims ai jlieved to be men. Seven bodi< ive been recovered. Sick Headache. This disease is caused by a derang ent of the stomach. Take a do : Chamberlain's Stomach and Liv ablets to correct this disorder and tl ck headache will disappear. For sa j Kaufmann Drug Co. Gov. Ansel has been asked by tl Dvernor of Tennessee to appoint de jates to attend the convention < jxtile manufacturing industries to 1 eld at Nashville on October 14. It is a well known fact that persoi ving in the pine forests do not suff om kidnev dsseases. One dose < ineules at night usually relieves bac 3I12. 30 days' treatment $1.00. Yoi loney refunded if not satisfied. So y Kaufmann Drug Co. No man is as dangerous as he thin] >me woman thinks he is. Q69Q6969Q6I 1 BUGGIES, I m ca m S5 eg A Car Load o | ftf) Come and see my Stc ijrmi ?5cacSB??5?5? is g This is Headquarters S > '' : : FOR 7? ?/?ww A w*. *~m ?]n PIKUM L ? You want a sweet d toned and durable in,e strument. a One that will last a i- long, long life time. Our prices are the !h lowest, consistent 10 with quality. !e Write'us for cata" logs, prices and terms d .. : MALONE'S MUSIC HOUSE, COLUMBIA, S. C. .e N. B. References: Any Bank >f or Business House in Columns bia, ? Established over 22 years. CIAVIIHIV OaaJA dlGlllllg UUUU5 n y Sterling silver, cut glass, fine * china, clocks. A fine stock always on hand for you to s select from. )f ' Keep us in mind when want? ing anything in Jewelry or le Silverware. Good watch work and best i eye glasses. If you can't come, send for our catalogue or telephone yodir 35 order to us. s P. B. LACHICOTTE 4 CO, JEWKLERS, 1424 Main St., Columbia, S. C. 'Phone 934 R UAYNFSWflRTH VI im IVBBW W<-? J h BARBER, l? 1332 Main Street, Near Skyscraper, re Columbia, S. C. o Expert Barbers, Sharp Razors and Clean Towels?Everything First-class. Thomas W. Reese will be glad to serve liis Lexington customers and ~ many friend3 in the highest art of the gr profession. July 10. tf. 11 Poieiio Mime nine, LEXINGTON, S. C. le l'{ Literary, Scientific and Classical :,e Courses. Vocal and Instrumental Music, Drawing and Elocution. College Trained 19 Teachers. Expenses for Session $60 to $80. ? Fall Term Begins September 2, 1907. * Fall Term Ends January 10, 1908. .J Spring Term Begins January 13, 1908. Spring Term Closes May 15, 1908. Send for catalogue. Address ^8 W. E. BLACK, Principal. M. D. HARMAN, Secretary. ttb viiUiiirMWiffii*^Filwii^FMKa"y???iff Bni\imi<innigm if I* T5 ' I ' 'i imniiifTii aniraf^fjjni 11 ig. JH TTim*ra fBIRDS^L Wagoi The Best Made. >ck. I am satisfied I can please and Prices. , - Little Moui FITZMAU Three Arcl I COLUMBIA ? DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, M The fall buying ought to give i wasted is foolishly sp6nt, and aftei ought to do yourself justice to buy Arch Store, where we can save yoi on the yard there and $2.00 on thii all wool Blanket. Great bargains high, still we own them about the style, the quality and quantity to saves you more and you get bette: free. Don't wait too long, come nc TTI BROWN 1730 MAIN STREET, CI ' Is where you can find one < ^PAIN | OF ALL ?1 DOORS. SAS BLINDS < LIME AND C ||| CABINET M ;Ij Call or write for Prices. TO I FAIRBANKS, MORSE @> U?WPBBgil.1 AJJ'IJJL1 1 * f aga?&eaf?S? ] WAGONS i if 6$ f$W SS i fiHf ' ?a 1 PS ' M sa <MK ?0 . HF?\ V 0f> fx i is, all sizes, gg you in Vehicles M ^HPBPP stain, S. C. ? BmmcacaeS GOCaSQQQ ^ RICE'S h Store, o n L EO. V^. ILLI1RF; CARPETS, pou serious thought. Money working hard for it you Dry Goods from the Three 1 5c. on the yard here, 10c. s jacket, $1.50 on this pair this fall when goods are same as usual. See1 the select from. This store j r goods. Fashion papers >w. I & BRO., ( OLUMBIA, S. C., | of the best stocks of !; * ITS^ NDS. | ;h. fc glass, 3EMENT. , ^ ANTLES. I ;V ? = \ OURLPIES found favor with everybody >es and men, the little girl in ores and her mother and her * i w rm_ ?? .a i.i? rmuciicr. xiicy are 01 tne t, delicious, wholesome, in-your-mouth kind, and > anxious to have you try if you don't know the pro\ of our ovens. If you do r we won't have to ask you. LINGER'S STEAM BAKERY, COLUMBIA, S. C. OD BY HAND 71 ill Trades Gasoline Engine E little and will do as much work as ten 3 e men at less than one-tenth o{ one B ay. It is sent all set up, ready to run. B belted to any farm machinery. Grinder, ? Shredder, Hay Press, Pump, Chum, B ->r. etc. B sizes of engines up to 200 H. P., operete co m? oline. Kerosene or Alcohol. 38 t complete advertisement sad send for .-Hus* H tsioruc No. H853 9 * CO., Chicago, ID. g I. in. n n.? It * %